
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Adam Tornhill is a programmer who combines degrees in engineering and psychology. He's the founder of CodeScene where he designs tools for software analysis. He’s also the author of Software Design X-Rays, the best-selling book Your Code as a Crime Scene, Lisp for the Web, and Patterns in C. Adam’s other interests include modern history, music, and martial arts.
Topics of Discussion:
[2:10] Adam talks about how he got his start in code metrics 25 years ago and why he’s discovered that it’s so hard to write good code.
[3:48] What are the other book ideas Adam has to add to his existing four?
[4:53] What motivated Adam to write Your Code as a Crime Scene and what is the premise?
[9:02] When assembling the data, relevance, as well as quality, are both important.
[10:29] Cyclomatic complexity is an old metric, as are many others, that is not quite tangible or relevant.
[11:58] Why Adam prefers to look at code health vs. code quality.
[13:26] The process is slightly different when looking at code health for existing code vs. writing new code.
[15:23] How does CodeScene aid in the pull request process?
[18:31] CodeScene integrates with your version control repository and work tracking tools to find where bugs were introduced.
[22:22] Is CodeScene meant to be a standalone tool or can it work alongside many of the other tools on the market?
[24:57] Adam’s rules of thumb for those getting started in software systems.
[28:12] Why Adam’s preferred method of delivering software architecture has changed over the years.
[30:36] What are the steps for implementing CodeScene into a codebase?
Mentioned in this Episode:
Architect Tips — New video podcast!
Azure DevOps
Clear Measure (Sponsor)
.NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer’s Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon!
Jeffrey Palermo’s YouTube
Jeffrey Palermo’s Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events!
CodeScene — Free Community Edition
Adam Tornhill on Github
Software Design X-Rays
Your Code as a Crime Scene
Lisp for the Web
Patterns in C
“Code Red: The Business Impact of Code Quality”
Want to Learn More?
Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.
Quotes:
Adam: Website | Twitter | LinkedIn
By Jeffrey Palermo4.6
2222 ratings
Adam Tornhill is a programmer who combines degrees in engineering and psychology. He's the founder of CodeScene where he designs tools for software analysis. He’s also the author of Software Design X-Rays, the best-selling book Your Code as a Crime Scene, Lisp for the Web, and Patterns in C. Adam’s other interests include modern history, music, and martial arts.
Topics of Discussion:
[2:10] Adam talks about how he got his start in code metrics 25 years ago and why he’s discovered that it’s so hard to write good code.
[3:48] What are the other book ideas Adam has to add to his existing four?
[4:53] What motivated Adam to write Your Code as a Crime Scene and what is the premise?
[9:02] When assembling the data, relevance, as well as quality, are both important.
[10:29] Cyclomatic complexity is an old metric, as are many others, that is not quite tangible or relevant.
[11:58] Why Adam prefers to look at code health vs. code quality.
[13:26] The process is slightly different when looking at code health for existing code vs. writing new code.
[15:23] How does CodeScene aid in the pull request process?
[18:31] CodeScene integrates with your version control repository and work tracking tools to find where bugs were introduced.
[22:22] Is CodeScene meant to be a standalone tool or can it work alongside many of the other tools on the market?
[24:57] Adam’s rules of thumb for those getting started in software systems.
[28:12] Why Adam’s preferred method of delivering software architecture has changed over the years.
[30:36] What are the steps for implementing CodeScene into a codebase?
Mentioned in this Episode:
Architect Tips — New video podcast!
Azure DevOps
Clear Measure (Sponsor)
.NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer’s Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon!
Jeffrey Palermo’s YouTube
Jeffrey Palermo’s Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events!
CodeScene — Free Community Edition
Adam Tornhill on Github
Software Design X-Rays
Your Code as a Crime Scene
Lisp for the Web
Patterns in C
“Code Red: The Business Impact of Code Quality”
Want to Learn More?
Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.
Quotes:
Adam: Website | Twitter | LinkedIn

271 Listeners

380 Listeners

291 Listeners

476 Listeners

624 Listeners

155 Listeners

589 Listeners

41 Listeners

214 Listeners

232 Listeners

987 Listeners

181 Listeners

245 Listeners

62 Listeners

141 Listeners